, many mercury-in-glass thermometers are used in
meteorology; however, they are becoming increasingly rare for other uses, as many countries banned them for
medical use due to the
toxicity of mercury. Some manufacturers use
galinstan, a liquid alloy of
gallium,
indium, and
tin, or
propylene carbonate , as a replacement for mercury. The typical "fever thermometer" contains between of elemental mercury. Swallowing this amount of mercury would pose little danger but the inhaling of the vapour could lead to health problems.
List of countries with regulations or recommendations on mercury thermometers that banned mercury-in-glass thermometers according to Directive 2007/51/EC as of 22 January 2013. Countries in blue have made legal bans on the issue, countries in gray are of unknown status at the present, and countries in red are those whose "Member State does not consider national execution measures necessary."
Argentina In February 2009, the
Argentine Health Ministry instructed by resolution 139/09 that all health centres and hospitals should buy mercury-free thermometers and
blood pressure meters and called on
dentists,
medical technicians, and
environmental health specialists to start eliminating this toxin. , mercury thermometers were still on sale to the public at
pharmacies.
Austria There was a voluntary take-back action for thermometers containing mercury based on the Federal Waste Management Plan 2006, and carried out in close cooperation between the Austrian Chamber of Pharmacists (Österreichische Apothekerkammer), the
Federal Ministry of Environment, a private waste disposer, a producer of electronic thermometers and a pharmaceutical distributor. The disposal company supplied each pharmacy (approximately 1,200) with a collection bin and covered the cost of disposal. The pharmaceutical distributor covered the logistical costs for the distribution of the thermometers. The pharmacies accepted a refund of only 0.50 Euro per thermometer for handling (which is far below their normal margin). The supplier provided the thermometers at a reduced price. The Federal Ministry supported each sold thermometer (covering about 30% of the direct costs) and advertised the project. During the collection period, consumers could bring in a mercury thermometer and buy an electronic thermometer for a subsidised price of 1 Euro. Between October 2007 and January 2008, about 465,000 electronic thermometers were sold and about one million mercury thermometers (together containing about 1 tonne of mercury) were collected.
Philippines By the Philippines
Department of Health’s Administrative Order 2008-0221, all mercury equipment from hospitals, including mercury-in-glass thermometers, was to be phased out in the
Philippines by September 28, 2010. Even before the order was released, 50 hospitals had already banned mercury from their establishments. Among these fifty hospitals, the
Philippine Heart Center was the first one to do so.
San Juan de Dios Hospital,
Philippine Children’s Medical Center,
San Lazaro Hospital,
Ospital ng Muntinlupa,
Lung Center of the Philippines, the
National Kidney and Transplant Institute,
Manila Adventist Medical Center and
Las Piñas Hospital also made steps to ban the toxic chemical. The country was the first one to make a step to ban mercury from its health care system in
Southeast Asia and they used non-mercury digital thermometers instead.
United Kingdom Since
European Union directive 2007/51/EC came into force on 3 April 2009, the UK
Health Protection Agency (HPA) reported that mercury thermometers could no longer be sold to the general public. Shops holding stocks of unsold thermometers had to withdraw them from sale; mercury thermometers purchased before this date could be used without legal implications. The purpose of these restrictions is to protect the environment and public health by decreasing the amount of mercury waste released. The HPA had, in 2007, released a guide to dealing with small spills of mercury. Despite the phasing-out of mercury thermometers in the United Kingdom, British media continues to refer to
temperature measurements, especially for
weather forecasts, as "the mercury".
United States In the United States, both the
American Academy of Pediatrics recommend that alternative thermometers be used in the home. ==See also==